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Full Discussion: Career Path
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Career Path Post 302643511 by navy on Saturday 19th of May 2012 04:03:08 PM
Old 05-19-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by jim mcnamara
The jobs are not always the issue. The problem is getting past HR idiots who insert themselves in the resume review path. They look for reasons to exclude people. This is why I suggested looking for some sort of leverage.

Concrete example: SCT in Columbia SC produced a schizophrenic product called banner that was a utility CIS and a college student mgt app. They sold most of it off. If you had worked supporting that product (even 10 years ago) or coding or whatever there are still some places that would want to interview you.

Discrete skill sets with legacy apps can be a real plus. There are places that are "stuck" with legacy OSes like Solaris 8 or db's like Oracle 9. Exploit those.

Certs convince HR idiots to look at you, so if you are determined to do that, get going.
And yes the testing costs $$.

Jim, thanks for the response. I think I am going to get books and study on my own and go take the cert tests. Once I get the certs, I can apply for entry positions to get my foot in the door and build myself up this way.
 

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XML::Grove::Path(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				       XML::Grove::Path(3)

NAME
XML::Grove::Path - return the object at a path SYNOPSIS
use XML::Grove::Path; # Using at_path method on XML::Grove::Document or XML::Grove::Element: $xml_obj = $grove_object->at_path("/some/path"); # Using an XML::Grove::Path instance: $pather = XML::Grove::Path->new(); $xml_obj = $pather->at_path($grove_object); DESCRIPTION
"XML::Grove::Path" returns XML objects located at paths. Paths are strings of element names or XML object types seperated by slash ("/") characters. Paths must always start at the grove object passed to `"at_path()"'. "XML::Grove::Path" is not XPath, but it should become obsolete when an XPath implementation is available. Paths are like URLs /html/body/ul/li[4] /html/body/#pi[2] The path segments can be element names or object types, the objects types are named using: #element #pi #comment #text #cdata #any The `"#any"' object type matches any type of object, it is essentially an index into the contents of the parent object. The `"#text"' object type treats text objects as if they are not normalized. Two consecutive text objects are seperate text objects. AUTHOR
Ken MacLeod, ken@bitsko.slc.ut.us SEE ALSO
perl(1), XML::Grove(3) Extensible Markup Language (XML) <http://www.w3c.org/XML> perl v5.8.0 1999-08-17 XML::Grove::Path(3)
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